| Literature DB >> 31287059 |
J Graham Ruby1, Megan Smith1, Rochelle Buffenstein1.
Abstract
For most adult mammals, the risk of death increases exponentially with age, an observation originally described for humans by Benjamin Gompertz. We recently performed a Kaplan-Meier survival analysis of naked mole-rats (Heterocephalus glaber) and concluded that their risk of death remains constant as they grow older (Ruby et al., 2018). Dammann et al. suggest incomplete historical records potentially confounded our demographic analysis (Dammann et al., 2019). In response, we applied the left-censorship technique of Kaplan and Meier to exclude all data from the historical era in which they speculate the records to be confounded. Our new analysis produced indistinguishable results from what we had previously published, and thus strongly reinforced our original conclusions.Entities:
Keywords: Gompertz; aging; ecology; lifespan; mortal hazard; naked mole-rat
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31287059 PMCID: PMC6615856 DOI: 10.7554/eLife.47047
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Elife ISSN: 2050-084X Impact factor: 8.140
Figure 1.Exclusion of all pre-2008 lifespan data through left-censorship did not modify the observed lifespan demographics of H. glaber.
(A) Kaplan–Meier survival curve for naked mole-rats after reaching reproductive maturity (Tsex; 6 months from birth; 183 days; red). Green: original calculation (Figure 1 of Ruby et al., 2018). Orange: calculation on the same data, left-truncated on January 1, 2008 (see Materials and methods). Purple: expected survivals from Tsex given a constant mortality hazard of 8 × 10−5 per day (Ruby et al., 2018). Inset: a histogram of left-censorship events. (B) Hazard estimates across each of the lifespan bins (from Figure 1B of Ruby et al., 2018), calculated for both of the survival plots from panel (A), colored as in panel (A). Vertical bars indicate 95% confidence intervals. Dotted grey line indicates 8 × 10−5 deaths per day.